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From the first frame to the last looks and feels exactly the way a horror movie should look and feel; oozes atmosphere from every pore and keeps us on the edge of our seats in suspense.
Although Radcliffe is given his fair share of dialogue, much of his performance is spent treading cautiously down hallways, slinking into creepy rooms, and running after figures hidden in fog or shadow. It all depends on his ability to react. And yet he never tries for the exaggerated pantomime of a silent movie actor; he relies almost entirely on his eyes, which perpetually express grief, surprise, fear, or any combination of the three. Through his gaze, we understand how we’re feeling at any given moment during the film, and it’s quite possible we will continue to feel that way even when the movie is over. The Woman in Black is not about cheap thrills, which are anonymous and fleeting. It’s about stirring within us the very fears we cling to as children. The fact that you’re older now doesn’t make the dark any less scary.
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| Release: | February 3, 2012 |
| Rating: | PG-13 |
| Studio: | CBS Films |
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Written by Chris Pandolfi (editor-at-large)
An early twentieth century setting. English marshland shrouded in fog. Rain,
thunder, and lightning. A graveyard shrouded in ivy and dead twigs. A decaying
mansion high atop a hill. Rooms blanketed in dust and cobwebs. Dark hallways
faintly lit by candlelight. The sounds of whispers and crying bouncing off the
walls. A shadowy figure stalking the premises. From the first frame to the last,
The Woman in Black looks and feels exactly the way a horror
movie should look and feel. I would expect nothing less from Hammer Film
Productions, which gave us the British horror films of the 1950s and ‘60s, many
starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. Here is a film that oozes atmosphere
from every pore and keeps us on the edge of our seats in suspense.
Adapted from the novel by Susan Hill, the plot never ties to be anything more
or less than a gothic Victorian ghost story, which in this case is not a
drawback but a loving gesture on the part of the filmmakers. We’re not assaulted
with crude slasher tactics like relentless gore, masked serial killers, and
naked teenagers; instead, we’re made to savor the apprehension as it slowly
gains momentum. Some of the pressure is relieved with an occasional pop out
scare – throwaway gags to be sure, but effective nonetheless. Most of the time,
however, it just keeps building, even when the story reaches its conclusion.
When our hero slowly creeps his way down a dark passage with only a candle in
his hand, we might think he’s crazy for even being in the house, but mostly we
cling to our armchairs in sheer anticipation of something scary happening.

The hero is Arthur Kipps (Daniel Radcliffe), a young lawyer from London. He
has a four-year-old son named Joseph (Misha Handley), who can never draw a
picture of his father without giving him a frowny face. Indeed, he has had good
reason be miserable since the death of his wife, whose memory haunts him as
surely as the title character eventually does. But I’m getting ahead of the
story. He’s sent to a faraway village to settle the legal affairs of a recently
deceased woman. The villagers look on him dourly, as if he were a harbinger of
doom. One man immediately scuttles his children inside their home as soon as he
passes by. Upon meeting a landowner named Sam Daily (Ciarán Hinds), Arthur
becomes aware that there has been a disturbing pattern of local children
inexplicably killing themselves. It becomes more apparent when he meets Sam’s
wife (Janet McTeer), who appears to possess the ability to channel the spirit of
her son.
Arthur settles himself in the dead woman’s sprawling, dilapidated estate,
which can only be accessed via a winding dirt road that disappears every evening
with the tide. It isn’t long before strange things begin to happen. Noises are
heard off in the distance. A door, which was locked at first, suddenly opens and
reveals a nightmarish nursery, complete with a rocking chair that rocks on its
own, mechanical toys that suddenly spring into motion, and a collection of
dirt-caked dolls with dead, glassy eyes that stare off into space. Initially
intact family portraits are obscured when the eyes of each subject are scratched
off. Strangest of all is the continuous appearance and disappearance of a woman
in a black dress. Sometimes she’s outside the estate, off in the distance by a
makeshift cross sticking out of the mud. Unbeknownst to Arthur – for a time, at
least – she will sometimes appear right behind him.
This woman, whom we know to be a ghost, has been woven into the fabric of
local legend, her appearance signaling the impending death of another child. She
does, of course, have her own tragic back story that’s right in line with this
genre. No need to spell it out for you. Chances are you already have a pretty
good idea. Regardless, the secret of the Woman in Black endangers not only the
remaining children of the village, but also Arthur’s son, who’s scheduled to
join his father at the end of the week. Despite the fact that Sam doesn’t
believe in ghosts, he teams up with Arthur in a desperate attempt to stop the
Woman in Black before it’s too late.
Although Radcliffe is given his fair share of dialogue, much of his
performance is spent treading cautiously down hallways, slinking into creepy
rooms, and running after figures hidden in fog or shadow. It all depends on his
ability to react. And yet he never tries for the exaggerated pantomime of a
silent movie actor; he relies almost entirely on his eyes, which perpetually
express grief, surprise, fear, or any combination of the three. Through his
gaze, we understand how we’re feeling at any given moment during the film, and
it’s quite possible we will continue to feel that way even when the movie is
over. The Woman in Black is not about cheap thrills, which are
anonymous and fleeting. It’s about stirring within us the very fears we cling to
as children. The fact that you’re older now doesn’t make the dark any less
scary.

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